The war on drugs
represents more than 50 years of wasted resources, lost lives and preventable
harms in the lives of people around the world. It has been a war on human
beings since the coming into force of the UN Single
Convention on Narcotics Drugs in 1961.
Rather than reduce drug
use or drug markets, this war has simply washed immense amounts of money down
the drain through adopting repressive measures – mainly directed at what has
described as the ‘small fry’ (small scale producers and consumers of illicit
drugs), rather than the ‘big fish’ who are profiting from this global illicit
economy.
All over the world, repressive drug policies are mostly an ideological
and reactionary response to the situation on the ground, and are not based on
evidence. It is a massive failure: this situation has not only stigmatized people
who use drugs, it has also led to misguided and harmful policy making, an ongoing concerted effort to overstate the dangers of drugs – the primary actors being
politicians, law enforcement agencies, and an ill-informed media – and led to a
situation where billions of people are unable to access essential medicines
for pain relief and palliative care.
The current policy discourages
people who use drugs from accessing health services through fear of arrest, and
there have been countless violations of the human
rights of people in the name of the war on drugs. As a result, the war on drugs
is fueling the global HIV epidemic as drug using communities are driven
underground and faced with increased risks such as the sharing of needles and
syringes that can lead to blood-borne infections.
Mounting evidence shows
that there is the need to move towards a new policy approach – one in which
progress is measured by public health indicators such as the number of people receiving
drug treatment, rather than being measured by seizures and arrests.
New policy initiatives
around the world have taken the form of reducing punitive penalties for minor,
non-violent drug offenses, and stepping up harm reduction and public health
measures to protect people who use drugs (and their communities) from harms
such as HIV.
In these debates, decriminalization
is often confused with legalization – sometimes by accident, but sometimes on
purpose to confuse the discussions. They are not the same thing. Under
legalization, the sale, acquisition, use and possession of drugs are legal and
regulated by Government. Our current policies regulating alcohol and tobacco
are core examples of this approach in practice. Under
this regime, the drug trade is taken away from criminal gangs, whose lucrative
illegal markets are undercut and reduced.
On the other hand,
under the decriminalization model adopted by a number of countries around the
world, the use and personal possession of drugs remains prohibited – but is no
longer a crime: it is instead punishable by administrative sanctions much like
traffic violation offenses are. Sanctions may include fines, community-based
service orders, warnings, education
classes, – or no
penalty at all.
The crucial difference
is that, under this regime, drugs are still illegal, but violations do not
attract criminal sanctions or criminal records which can create significant
barriers to obtaining employment, housing, government benefits, treatment, etc.
At the same time, the supply, production and trafficking of these drugs remains
illegal and criminal – and greater law enforcement resources can be focused on
these ‘big fish’ instead of the ‘small fry’.
Decriminalization is
not a new concept. Some countries never actually criminalized drug use in the
first place, and the much-documented experiences of Portugal date back to 2001,
when the Government made the decision to decriminalize
all drugs for personal use, and reinvest the criminal justice savings into
health and treatment services.
This debate globally
has often generated more heat than light. You often hear questions like
"So, are you saying that we should legalize drugs? Should we create a free-for-all
for drug users and drug dealers in our communities?” But we just need to look
at how this has worked out for Portugal: they have been able to: increase their
spending on prevention and treatment; decreased spending for criminal
prosecutions and incarceration; dramatically reduce levels of drug-related
deaths; and reduce drug use itself among certain age groups. Drug use remains
an issue in Portugal, but they have tackled the confounding challenges of
stigmatization, marginalization and high incarceration of a substantial
proportion of their population just for minor drug offenses.
The rationale behind
decriminalization is to reduce the harms associated with criminalizing people
who use drugs, because there are several risks associated with drug use – not
least HIV and other infections, and the thousands of drug-related deaths every
year.
Although
the international drug control Conventions restrict the use of controlled drugs
to medical and scientific purposes, they should not be
interpreted as a validation for the repressive war on drugs. The
criminalisation of the possession of illicit drugs for personal use was
introduced by the 1988 UN Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs
and Psychoactive Substances – with Article 3(2)
stating:
‘...each Party shall adopt such measures as may be necessary
to establish as a criminal offense
under its domestic law when committed intentionally, the possession,
purchase or cultivation of narcotic drugs
or psychotropic substances for personal
consumption”.
As has been noted by
Release and others, the commentary for this Convention says plainly that this
paragraph “amounts in fact also to a penalization of personal use”. However, Article
3(2) begins with the statement that any measures adopted shall be "subject
to its constitutional principles and the basic concepts of its legal systems."
Furthermore, Article 36 of the 1961 Convention states that countries “may
provide, either as an alternative to conviction or punishment or in addition to
conviction or punishment, that such abusers shall undergo measures of
treatment, education, aftercare, rehabilitation and social reintegration”.
This therefore allows countries
to adopt less punitive approaches to drug possession and use – including
decriminalisation – without breaching their international responsibilities, as
has been formally acknowledged by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Prohibition is built
upon a premise that repression will act as a deterrence to drug use and supply.
Yet no links exist between levels of criminalisation
and levels of drug use – as was recently noted by the UK Home Office in
their ‘Drugs: International Comparators’ report. In Ghana, prohibition has not
seen a decline in drug use in the country since the coming into force of the
Provisional National
Defence Council Law 236 in 1990. The use of drugs such as marijuana
and cocaine is on the ascendency, with thousands of people, particularly the
youth, using drugs.
The current bill in
Ghana focuses more on punishment than on
providing a legal framework to support people who use drugs as an alternative
means of curbing our drug problems. There are very few effective drug treatments
available to people who suffer as a result of drug addiction. The current
review process of our drug laws (for the first time since 1990) is an excellent
opportunity for Ghana to make an assessment of what has worked and what has not
worked over the years, and to adopt an effective drug law grounded on the
health and well-being of its citizens.
Ghana needs to take a
cue from other progressive countries and consider the decriminalization of
drugs, as well as other alternatives to incarceration.
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